Westmoreland said her district recommends recording virtual learning sessions in case some students can't make the meeting, or need to re-watch.
Second grader London Harkness sits in a Google Meet classroom session on Aug. 26, 2020. London is a student at Mount Olive Elementary School in King, North Carolina.MORE: Mom falls through ceiling during daughter's audition, goes viral on TikTokSecond grader Maston Blalock sits in a Google Meet classroom session on Aug. 26, 2020. Maston is a student at Mount Olive Elementary School in King, North Carolina.
Michelle Westmoreland, an educator at Mount Olive Elementary School in King, North Carolina, was reading a story to 17 second graders on Aug. 26 when she was booted from Google Meet. "My first thought was, 'They did a really good job with that,'" Edmonds, a teacher, told"GMA.""They were trying to problem solve and were so well-behaved and respectful of each other. I thought it was really neat."Second grader Jett Edmonds sits in a Google Meet classroom session on Aug. 26, 2020. Jett is a student at Mount Olive Elementary School in King, North Carolina.
That's precious! What great kids! I'd be hella proud too!
This is what happens to us all day... hi from Turkey:)
Yeah you posted this earlier. Arent online learning sessions private? Did the chinese send you this? Do you have permission from each of the kids parents?
المسجد الحرام بمكة المكرمة
Ha, that’s cute
Remote teaching and learning is an absolute joke and travesty.
Lol
Had to check twice to see if this was the onion.
👍🏿😘
Trump is wrong in politics, especially because he cannot resolve racial conflicts.